|
Deep Blue at the University of Michigan >
All Collections >
Information, School of (SI) >
|
Please use this persistent URL to cite or link to this item:
|
| Title: | Antitrust Immunity for Refusals to Deal in (Intellectual) Property Is a Slippery Slope |
| Authors: | MacKie-Mason, Jeffrey K. |
| Issue Date: | Jul-2002 |
| Citation: | The Antitrust Source (July 2002). <http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/50437> |
| Abstract: | The Federal Circuit's decision in CSU v. Xerox1 has generated enormous controversy. However, there seems to be emerging agreement among both critics and supporters of the decision on a correct, narrow reading of the decision. Whatever else the decision stands for, it appears to declare antitrust immunity for unilateral refusals to sell or license patented or copyrighted intellectual property (IP).
What was at stake in Xerox is whether a firm with a legitimate property right in the design of certain parts has the right to condition sale of those parts with terms that enable Xerox to obtain a monopoly in a different market, for service labor. More broadly, what is at stake is a safe harbor for conduct that previously has been found illegal. For, although much emphasis is placed on whether this was a unilateral refusal to deal (as opposed to a concerted agreement, which would not be exempt from Section 1 scrutiny), it is at least as important that this was a conditional refusal. As I show below, the meaningful distinction between this conditional refusal to deal and a conventional illegal tie is nil. Further, if an antitrust exemption is given to all conditional unilateral refusals to deal, this formalistic shield will be easily available in the future to firms that would otherwise be subject to antitrust liability for tying or other concerted agreements. |
| Appears in Collections: | Information, School of (SI) Economics, Department of
|
Files in This Item:
| File |
Description |
Size | Format | |
| JMM Slippery Slope.pdf | | 81Kb | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
|
Deep Blue encourages the fair use of copyrighted material, and you are free to link to content here without asking for permission. Consult the document(s) and/or contact the copyright holder for additional rights questions and requests.
|